Dakota/Lakota Progressive Writers: Charles Eastman, Standing Bear, and Zitkala Sa Gretchen Eick Friends University a cold bare pole I seemed to be, planted in a strange earth1 This paper focuses on three Dakota/Lakota progressive writers: Charles Alexander Eastman (Ohiyesa) of the Santee/Dakota; Luther Standing Bear (Ota Kte) of the Brulé; and Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkala Sa) of the Yankton. All three were widely read and popular “Indian writers,” who wrote about their traumatic childhoods, about being caught between two ways of living and perceiving, and about being coerced to leave the familiar for immersion in the ways of the whites. Eastman wrote dozens of magazine articles and eleven books, two of them auto- biographies, Indian Boyhood (1902) and From the Deep Woods to Civilization (1916).2 Standing Bear wrote four books, two of them autobiographies, My People, the Sioux (1928) and My Indian Boyhood (1931).3 Zitkala Sa wrote more than a dozen articles, several auto-biographical, and nine books, one autobiographical, American Indian Stories (1921), and the others Dakota stories, such as Old Indian Legends (1901). She also co- wrote an opera The Sun Dance. 4 1 Zitkala Sa, “An Indian Teacher Among the Indians,” American Indian Stories, Legends, and Other Writings, Cathy N. Davidson and Ada Norris, eds., ( New York: Penguin Books, 2003), 112. 2The other titles are Red Hunters and the Animal People (1904), Old Indian Days (1907), Wigwam Evenings: Sioux Folk Tales Retold (1909), Smoky Day’s Wigwam Evenings: Indian Stories Retold (1910), The Soul of an Indian: An Interpretation (1911), Indian Child Life (1913), The Indian Today: The Past and Future of the First Americans (1915), Indian Heroes and Great Chieftains (1918), Indian Scout Talks: A Guide for Boy Scouts and Campfire Girls (1914), and his two autobiographies, Indian Boyhood (1902) and From the Deep Woods to Civilization (1916). 3 Luther Standing Bear also wrote traditional stories in Land of the Spotted Eagle (1933) and Stories of the Sioux (1934). He began writing in his fifties, whereas Eastman began writing in his thirties and Zitkala Sa in her twenties. 4 “Impressions of an Indian Childhood,” in Atlantic Monthly (January 1900); “The School Days of an Indian Girl,” Atlantic Monthly (February 1900); “An Indian Teacher Among Indians,” Atlantic Monthly (March 1900), “Why I am a Pagan,” Atlantic Monthly (December1902) were autobiographical articles. Her biographer Doreen Rappaport in The Flight of Red Bird: The Life of Zitkala Sa (New York: Penguin/Puffin Books, 1997) details Zitkala Sa’s other talents which absorbed her creative energies: violinist, pianist, elocutionist, lobbyist, editor of a magazine, social worker on the Uintah Reservation, investigator of fraud in Oklahoma, etc. However, a list of two dozen published works is included in Gary Totten, "Zitkala-Sa and the Problem of Regionalism: Nations, Narratives, and Critical Traditions," The American Indian Quarterly (Winter-Spring 2005):84(40). According to Cathy N. Davidson and Ada Norris in the introduction to Zitkala Sa: American Indian Stories, Legends, and Other Writings (New York: Penguin Books, 2003), xiii, her stories were included in high school textbooks and school readers in several states including New York and Virginia by 1920. 98 Dakota/Lakota Progressive Writers Eastman was the oldest, born in 1858. Standing Bear was ten years younger, and Zitkala Sa eighteen years younger than Eastman. Collectively their recorded experiences date from 1862 to 1920. They wrote during a time of great suffering, when the number of Indian people had decreased due to forced relocations onto ever shrinking land, and the banning of traditional ways of acquiring and producing food that resulted in near- starvation conditions on the Great Plains.5 By the time Zitkala Sa was a child, in the early 1880s, the traditional Lakota/Dakota world was rapidly disappearing, replaced by reservation life, and the people who inhabited those reservations suffered starvation and mental anguish, as she so vividly recorded.6 Eastman never lived on a reservation. With the Dakota War of 1862 he left the Minnesota River at age four as a refugee with his grandmother fleeing the U.S. army ultimately to a refugee settlement in Manitoba, Canada.7 Eleven years later, his father arrived in Canada to bring his youngest son, Ohiyesa, back to the U.S. where he was homesteading in a Dakota community at Flandreau on the border of Dakota Territory and Minnesota. There the teen attended the local school, cut his hair, wore Euro-American dress, changed his name to Charles Eastman, and, with great reluctance, began to 5 Frederick E. Hoxie, “From Prison to Homeland: The Cheyenne River Indian Reservation before World War I,” South Dakota History 10 (Winter 1979), 1-24. 6 In their books of legends and tales they shared the stories they learned from their elders that might be heard around a campfire or inside a tipi at night before sleep. Characters like the trickster Iktomi appear in these stories, functioning similarly to the Uncle Remus Brer Rabbitt stories that had their origin in the slave cabins of the South. Each of these writers recorded the stories that named and claimed them as Dakota/Lakota, capturing these stories in writing for generations to come, and demonstrating in their recounting the complexity and values of their culture. According to contemporary Dakota historian Wazayitawin Angela Wilson, recording the traditional stories is an act of claiming and continuing one’s culture and resisting the colonizer’s goal of eradicating that culture. Wilson has broken new ground in her work on the central role of storytelling in Dakota/Lakota culture, and by extension in the cultures of other indigenous American groups. She is part of a small cadre of transnational indigenous scholars who call the attention of academia to how it has aided the colonization of native peoples. These scholars assert the right of indigenous people to control how research about their lives and histories is done. Her book Remember This! builds on earlier work by New Zealand Maori scholar Linda Tuhiwa Smith and Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong’o and challenges how historians conduct their work, laying out guidelines for “doing history” among indigenous peoples. She emphasizes the importance of listening closely to indigenous people telling their own stories to learn their historical experience and cultural values. She has begun the process of reviving the Dakota language and interviewing elders, the recognized conveyors of history and tradition, in the Dakota language without interrupting with questions, recording stories passed generation to generation for hundreds of years, stories central to the worldview of the Dakota. Wilson writes, “Dismissal of Indigenous perspectives is symptomatic of the relationship of the colonizer to the colonized. Colonial dominance can be maintained only if the history of the subjugated is denied and that of the colonizer elevated and glorified.” Wazayitawin Angela Wilson’s insights offer a different way of listening to Dakota writers of the early twentieth century, listening for the values conveyed by the voices as well as the details of historical events that the oral historian/storyteller chooses to include. 7 William Bean maintains that Charles’ father Many Lightnings (Tawakanhdiota) and his brother John fled to the Winnipeg area of Canada 1862, but in the winter of 1864 were betrayed to US Army with 30-40 others by mixedbloods and sent without trial to Davenport prison in Iowa, where Dr. Wiliamson and Stephen Riggs ministered to them and baptized most of the prisoners. This is a different interpretation than Charles gives in his autobiographies. I have chosen to use Charles’ story. See William Bean, Eastman; Cloud Man; Many Lightnings; an Anglo-Dakota Family, compiled by William L. Bean, Great Grandson of John Eastman for Eastman Family Reunion, July 6, 1989, Flandreau, SD (at the Minnesota Historical Society). Dakota/Lakota Progressive Writers 99 assimilate. His life from age fifteen is told in his second autobiography, From the Deep Woods to Civilization (1916). Reunited with his father and brothers only one year, his father sent him East to “white” schools: “It is the same as if I sent you on your first warpath. I expect you to conquer.”8 Charles had known his mother for only a few months and his father for only five years. He never again saw his father, who died of an accident, or his grandmother, who returned to Canada. He pushed himself forward on the mission his father had laid out for him. He earned his Bachelor’s from Dartmouth College in New Hampshire and his medical degree from Boston University. He adapted to being one of a few Indians in mostly white educational institutions and enjoyed popularity with the ladies and as captain of the football team. He also enjoyed access to leading intellectuals and reformers and speaking to the annual Lake Mohonk Friends of the Indian gatherings.9 He returned West to Pine Ridge Agency on the Ogalala Lakota reservation to become the government physician-- his first experience of reservation life and “the dream of my life—to be of some service to my people.”10 Dr. Eastman invited people into the office, examined them speaking their language, kept records of their health problems, and made house calls. It was December 1890. A Lakota police officer explained the Ghost Dance movement to Dr. Eastman: A new religion has been proclaimed by some Indians in the Rocky Mountain region, and some time ago, Sitting Bull sent several of his men to investigate. We hear that they have come back, saying that they saw the prophet, or Messiah, who told them that he is God’s Son whom He has sent into the world a second time. He told them that He waited nearly two thousand years for the white men to carry out His teachings, but instead they had destroyed helpless small nations to satisfy their own selfish greed.
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